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RIGHTS-CAMBODIA: AIDS Orphans Turn to Streets for Survival By Vannaphone Sitthirath* PHNOM PENH, Jun 29 (IPS) - For six-year-old Samnang, life offers little
hope. The Cambodian boy has been orphaned by the death of his parents due
to AIDS, and has recently tested positive for HIV.
As many as 300,000 Cambodian children will become AIDS orphans in this
country of 12 million this year, and face a whole lot of staggering
problems with their childhood, according to the United Nations Joint
Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
Already, UNAIDS documents call Cambodia ''the Asian country with the
highest adult HIV prevalence''. More than 200,000 Cambodians, or more than
four percent of the adult population, are living with HIV.
HIV prevalence remains high among groups such as pregnant women and sex
workers, but statistics in recent years reflect a slight decline in these
rates from 1996 to 2002.
The pandemic is one among a series of risk factors for children in the
country, linked to issues like drug use, poverty and lack of options. These
factors also affect people in border areas and drive migration to other
places in Cambodia and to neighbouring countries.
Without support, the children face lives of begging, odd jobs, stealing,
involvement in organised crime, drug addiction and sexual exploitation.
Samnang and his two sisters are being looked after by their grandmother,
who makes a living as a fortune teller.
But Sebastian Marot, coordinator of the outreach centre Mith Samlanh
(Friends), predicted that Samnang would soon turn to the streets of Phnom
Penh for survival. ''His grandmother is old and cannot go on providing for
him and his sisters. He will be forced to the streets,'' said Marot.
''Samnang will be treated with trepidation because he's sick and will be
segregated. Other people in the community also treat him very badly. It
really has an enormous impact,'' he added. ''He will have no choice but to
turn to the streets.''
''HIV/AIDS is one of the main factors that push children into difficult
circumstances like being street children, being beggars and so on,'' said
Marot.
But even when AIDS orphans are treated well by relatives, they have much
to deal with - the grief of losing parents and having to adapt to a new
household - so that some run away, said Prang Chanthy of Impact Cambodia,
an AIDS prevention programme.
''The population of homeless people, especially children continues to
increase in the capital city,'' said Friends' Marot. ''Phnom Penh is the
magnet for many Cambodian children but the city itself cannot cater to this
huge influx of kids,'' he added. ''Sixty-five percent of Phnom Penh's
population is under 18.''
''Seeking to survive and have fun at the same time in the city, many of
them go into drugs, which offers them momentary escape from their
problems,'' Marot pointed out.
Heroin and methamphetamines are the drugs of choice for many, with the
latter - now produced in Cambodia - growing in popularity among children.
According to a survey by the International Labour Organisation (ILO),
some street children turn to drug trafficking to finance their addiction,
making trips to and from Phnom Penh to the western town of Poipet on the
Thai border, the point through where most drugs flow into Cambodia.
This rampant use of intravenous drugs also makes these Cambodian street
children vulnerable to HIV/AIDS, since drug use is also risky behaviour in
the pandemic.
Also among the substances abused by the children is glue that is used
commercially in tire production in Thailand. Glue is cheap and easily
available in Phnom Penh - and Laurence Gray of the non-government group
World Vision says it has the immediate effect of making those who sniff it
not feel hungry.
Gray said that from glue-sniffing, children usually end up using more
sophisticated drugs such as amphetamines.
A number of organisations have set up programmes to help AIDS orphans.
In Battambang, for instance, monks and nuns in a Buddhist monastery are
trying to do what they can with little money but creative approaches.
''One monk can feed seven children,'' said Muny Vansaveth, himself a
Buddhist monk.
When he started caring for abandoned children in 1992, he alone was
begging for food to feed those seven children. Now, there are 27 monks at
Nor temple and 66 boys and girls, 46 of whom are AIDS orphans.
''We try so hard,'' said Vansaveth. ''For 10 years, it was very
difficult - we had no funds. We wanted to protect them from being sold to
prostitution.''
With the help of several organisations and private donations from people
living abroad, Wat Norea Peaceful Children's Home has cared for 358
children through the years.
This is a safe haven for children, and 30 to 40 nuns help them in
addition to the monks. Children can stay as long as they need.
But despite such efforts, the vulnerabilities that Cambodian children
face, including those coping with HIV/AIDS, are fast changing society.
''Because of HIV/AIDS, the family structure in Cambodia is changing, as
more orphans and grandparents head households,'' said Lisa Garbus of the
AIDS Policy Research Centre in the University of California San Francisco.
''The percent of Cambodia's orphans that could be attributed to AIDS
rose from 1.4 percent in 1995 to 10.9 percent in 2001; this figure will
rise to 20.7 percent by 2005 and 27.5 percent by 2010,'' she wrote in a
recent report.
Added Garbus: ''Given years of genocide, civil war, and famine, the
ability of Cambodian families to cope with AIDS orphans is severely
strained.'' (END/IPS/AP/HE/HD/PR/SI/JS/04)
(*Vannaphone Sitthirath of Lao National Television wrote this article under
the IPS/Rockefeller Foundation media fellowship programme 'Our Mekong: A
Vision amid Globalisation'.)
(END/2004)
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